Nature of excitons bound to inversion domain boundaries: Origin of the 3.45-eV luminescence lines in spontaneously formed GaN nanowires on Si(111)

Carsten Pfüller, Pierre Corfdir, Christian Hauswald, Timur Flissikowski, Xiang Kong, Johannes K. Zettler, Sergio Fernández-Garrido, Pınar Doğan, Holger T. Grahn, Achim Trampert, Lutz Geelhaar, and Oliver Brandt
Phys. Rev. B 94, 155308 – Published 17 October 2016

Abstract

We investigate the 3.45-eV luminescence band of spontaneously formed GaN nanowires on Si(111) by photoluminescence and cathodoluminescence spectroscopy. This band is found to be particularly prominent for samples synthesized at comparatively low temperatures. At the same time, these samples exhibit a peculiar morphology, namely, isolated long nanowires are interspersed within a dense matrix of short ones. Cathodoluminescence intensity maps reveal the 3.45-eV band to originate primarily from the long nanowires. Transmission electron microscopy shows that these long nanowires are either Ga polar and are joined by an inversion domain boundary with their short N-polar neighbors, or exhibit a Ga-polar core surrounded by a N-polar shell with a tubular inversion domain boundary at the core/shell interface. For samples grown at high temperatures, which exhibit a uniform nanowire morphology, the 3.45-eV band is also found to originate from particular nanowires in the ensemble and thus presumably from inversion domain boundaries stemming from the coexistence of N- and Ga-polar nanowires. For several of the investigated samples, the 3.45-eV band splits into a doublet. We demonstrate that the higher-energy component of this doublet arises from the recombination of two-dimensional excitons free to move in the plane of the inversion domain boundary. In contrast, the lower-energy component of the doublet originates from excitons localized in the plane of the inversion domain boundary. We propose that this in-plane localization is due to shallow donors in the vicinity of the inversion domain boundaries.

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  • Received 18 July 2016
  • Revised 13 September 2016

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.94.155308

©2016 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Carsten Pfüller*,†, Pierre Corfdir, Christian Hauswald, Timur Flissikowski, Xiang Kong§, Johannes K. Zettler, Sergio Fernández-Garrido, Pınar Doğan, Holger T. Grahn, Achim Trampert, Lutz Geelhaar, and Oliver Brandt

  • Paul-Drude-Institut für Festkörperelektronik, Leibniz-Institut im Forschungsverbund Berlin e.V., Hausvogteiplatz 5–7, 10117 Berlin, Germany

  • *pfueller@pdi-berlin.de
  • C.P. and P.C. contributed equally to this work.
  • Present address: DILAX Intelcom GmbH, Alt-Moabit 96b, 10559 Berlin, Germany.
  • §Previously at Paul-Drude-Institut für Festkörperelektronik.
  • Present address: LayTec AG, Seesener Str. 10–13, 10709 Berlin, Germany.
  • Present address: Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University, Kötekli, 48000, Muğla, Turkey.

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Vol. 94, Iss. 15 — 15 October 2016

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